Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Through programs, research, and collections the Smithsonian Food History project at the National Museum of American History invites communities near and far to come to the table. By learning more about American food history, today’s museum visitors will understand the role they play in shaping how and what America eats.

Food programs are based in the rich food history content at the museum and include a diverse menu of programs and demonstrations that bring visitors together for relevant discussions that start with history and expand to the present and future of American food. Activities include free daytime programs for visitors, regular After Hours events that mix historic topics with delicious food and drink, and the annual Smithsonian Food History Weekend. The National Museum of American History is committed to examining the impact of food, drink, and agriculture on American History.

It was creating the American Brewing History Initiative, a three-year program at its National History of American History to collect, document, and preserve the history of brewing, 'craft' beer, and the beer industry, in order to

expand the Smithsonian’s understanding of the role beer has played—and continues to play—in American history.

To that end, the Smithsonian put out a request for CVs, looking for a qualified historian to receive a salary of $64,650 plus benefits.

The Smithsonian Food History project at the National Museum of American History, in Washington, DC, is seeking a professional historian / scholar to conduct archival and field research for a new initiative on American brewing history, with special emphasis on the craft industry. The position is located in the Division of Work and Industry and will be a three-year appointment.

The successful candidate will have proven experience in scholarly research, organizing and conducting oral history interviews, writing for both scholarly and general audiences, and knowledge of material culture and archival materials. The candidate will work with members of the curatorial staff on collections work and develop content for a wide variety of programs and applications, including digital formats. Candidates with an advanced degree in American business, brewing, food, cultural, or similar specialization within history are encouraged to apply. Must be able to travel, work independently as well as within a team environment, to meet deadlines, and to communicate effectively with co-workers and the public.

McCulla comes to the position with a background in social history and food; she holds a culinary arts diploma from the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts’ Professional Chefs Program, directed the Food Literacy Project for Harvard University Dining Services, and managed Harvard’s two local farmers markets from 2007 to 2010. She will receive a doctorate in American Studies from Harvard University in May of this year. But this is McCulla’s first time studying beer exclusively.

The Smithsonian has already used food as a very critical and successful entry point into talking with the public about much bigger questions relating to American history,” says McCulla. “We really feel quite strongly that beer is a very effective lens into much bigger questions about American history. If you look at the history of beer, you can understand stories related to immigration [emphasis mine] and industrialization and urbanization. You can look at advertising and the history of consumer culture and changing consumer taste. Brewing is integrated into all facets of American history.

The next phase of McCulla’s work will involve traveling around the country to visit brewers, hop farmers and other beer-focused professionals to collect objects and documents that could be put into the Smithsonian’s permanent collection. McCulla will also spend time interviewing those professionals, putting their words and stories together into an oral history of American brewing. And, throughout the process, her work will be shared with the public—either through events held at the Smithsonian, or through blog posts and social media.

The [U.S.] Brewers Association —a nonprofit trade group representing "small and independent" American breweries— is financially supporting the Brewing History Initiative. By how much, or if entirely, is not clear. YFGF hopes that President Trump's hiring freeze will not torpedo this program or Ms. McCulla's hiring.

According to the Association, the project will also include two annual public programs, one at the National Museum of American History during the Smithsonian Food History Weekend, which runs 26-28 October this year, and the other in various brewing communities around the country, and will participate in the Association's Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America, to be held this year in Washington, D.C., 10-13 April.

Thank you to the Smithsonian for recognizing the unique role of beer in American history. Congratulations to Theresa McCulla on her appointment. It might be a bit of hyperbole, but might we consider her America's first 'official' historian of beer?

Monday, January 30, 2017

A bi-weekly, non-comprehensive roundup
of news of beer and other things.

Weeks 1/21 January 2017 - 14 January 2017

14 January 2017
The animals will go to "suitable homes"; the humans will be out of a job. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to close after 146 years of operation.
—Via Washington Post.

12 January 2017
Hyper-local or as things used to be. Maryland farm-brewery brews beer with all of the ingredients grown and produced in Maryland.
—Via YFGF at Facebook.

12 January 2017
Brewing returns to the historic St. Paul, Minnesota, building that once housed the Jacob Schmidt Brewing Company (1855-1990), as 10-bbl 'craft' brewery to open in the development.
—Via Twin Cities Pioneer Press.

12 January 2017
Uh-oh. San Diego, California's Green Flash Brewing —which only recently opened a 2nd brewery, on the East Coast, in Virginia Beach, Virginia— lays off approximately 25 employees.
—Via The Full Pint.

12 January 2017

At 1:30 in the morning, the Senate took a major step toward repealing Affordable Care Act, offering no legislation to replace it.
—Via New York Times.

Repeal would destabilize the nongroup insurance market beginning in 2017 as a combination of several factors — pending loss of subsidies, elimination of the requirement to buy insurance, and the requirement on insurers to sell to all purchasers including protection for pre-existing conditions — would cause prices to rise and the healthiest people to drop coverage.
—Via Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

10 January 2017
The James Beard Foundation gives a Lifetime Achievement Award to Nora Pouillon, whose Restaurant Nora, in Washington, D.C., in 1999 became the first certified organic restaurant in the United States.
—Via DC Eater.

10 January 2017
That time that the judges at the World Beer Cup deemed Fullers ESB —the originator!— out-of-style for an ESB (Extra Special Bitter). The oft absurdity of beer style management.
—Via The Malting Floor.

10 January 2017
Clare Hollingworth, reporter who broke news about start of World War II, pioneering female in male-dominted press, dies at 105.
—Via Washington Post.

9 January 2017

Gone are the days when a schoolboy of 12½ drank four-X ale for breakfast. There are octogenarians of a physical and mental alertness which shows that it did them no harm; it occasioned, one said, 'much cheerfulness.'

9 January 2017
For the first time in more than a decade, the 'craft beer' category has failed to grow double-digits, according to new data from market research firm IRI Worldwide.

Craft dollar sales at U.S. supermarkets grew just 6.9 percent in 2016, to more than $2.28 billion, while volume sales grew at an even slower 4 percent clip. By comparison, craft dollar sales at U.S. supermarkets grew more than 20 percent and volume sales grew 16 percent in 2015. The last time craft dollar sales failed to grow by double-digits was 2005.

8 January 2017
Buddy Bregman, born 1930, —a Hollywood musical arranger and conductor who worked alongside some of the top entertainers of the 1950s and 1960s and helped shape Ella Fitzgerald’s landmark “Song Book” albums celebrating the music of classic American songwriters, such as Cole Porter and Richard Rodgers— has died at 86.
—Via Washington Post.

7 January 2017
Brewmaster defined?

People tend to use the words “brewmaster” and “head brewer” interchangeably, but to me they are very different roles.

The ten necessities to becoming a 'brewmaster.'
—Via Mitch Steele, at The Hop Tripper.

7 January 2017
The 2015 vintage in Beaujolais, France, may have that region's best vintage since the 1940s. Wine Enthusaist rates it with 96 points out of 100.
—Via Dave McIntyre, at Washington Post.

8 January 2017
Parker Beam (1941-2017), longtime master distiller for Kentucky-based Heaven Hill Distilleries, has died after battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, better known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Grandnephew of Jim Beam, Beam was among a small fraternity of master distillers who oversaw production at various Kentucky distilleries during bourbon’s revival. Beam’s career as a whiskey maker spanned more than a half-century at Bardstown-based Heaven Hill. He was 75.

One thing that bugged Parker was the term master distiller, a title he believed should be reserved for only the best. “When I came up, you had to be a mechanic, fix a pump, a hammer mill, prepare the yeast. You had to earn ‘master distiller.’ ”

7 January 2017
Nat Hentoff, journalist who wrote on jazz and civil liberties, in particular the First Amendment, has died at 91.
—Via Washington Post.

6 January 2017
On this day in 1941, President Fanklin D. Roosevelt delivered his famous "Four Freedoms" speech to Congress: freedom of speech; freedom of worship; freedom from want; freedom from fear.
—Via YFGF.

1 January 2017
Las Vegas has become largest American city to power all of its municipal facilities entirely with renewable energy.
—Via Huffington Post.

1 January 2017
The 'heirloom' Carolina African runner peanut —at one time, the American South's most praised peanut, first brought to America in the 1600s by enslaved West Africans, but, by the 1930s late 1800s, near extinction— is now being grown again.
—Via NPR.

1 January 2017
Expect stronger and bubblier American cider this year. The U.S. tax code just became more lenient.
—Via YFGF.

1 January 2017
My 'craft' beer wish for 2017.

That more 'craft' brewers would recognize that, without practice and education, innovation is an empty boast. Becoming a craftsperson is a different thing than immodestly self-proclaiming it. [...] 'Craft' brewers: when we purchase your beer, we are, in effect, subsidizing your education. For 2017: please learn!

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Georgia is one of two states left in America where breweries cannot sell/serve beer to customers directly — like in a taproom — ye old Mississippi is the other one. In fact, Georgia has really become a battleground for trying to revise regulations — a multi-year struggle by the government (Department of Revenue), the brewers, and the state’s powerful alcohol wholesalers.

Last year, begrudgingly, the state allowed breweries to sell beer via a dumb tour loophole scheme. The new rules allow brewers to sell tours of their facilities at different prices based on the quality and amount of beer customers receive as “free souvenirs.” That’s so obtuse and complicated.

In response, we here at CBB are offering an alternative idea to this bizarro law: Allow craft breweries to sell draft pints in taprooms and sell a certain quantity of beer directly to customers."

Simply put, Georgia is one of only two states in the United States which forbids its breweries from selling their beer to their customers in their taprooms. Mississippi is the other.

For Immediate Release, January 26, 2017
Atlanta, Georgia – The 2017 General Assembly of Georgia will consider legislation to allow consumers to purchase beer directly at the brewery that makes it.

Senator Rick Jeffares (R – McDonough), chairman of the Senate Regulated Industries and Utilities Committee, introduced Senate Bill 85, which will allow breweries to sell up to 3,000 barrels of the beer they manufacture to consumers visiting the brewery. If passed, consumers will be able to enjoy fresh beer by the glass, take up to one case to go, and purchase food without the tour package that is currently required. Furthermore, the bill slightly modifies the brewpub license to reinforce local control on issues of to-go sales from brewpubs.

Throughout the summer and fall of 2016 business leaders from craft breweries and their wholesale partners met to discuss common sense updates to benefit the beer industry in Georgia. “With suggestions championed by both brewers and wholesalers, Lt. Governor Casey Cagle, Speaker of the House David Ralston (R-Blue Ridge), House Regulated Industries Committee Chairman Howard Maxwell (R- Dallas), and Senator Jeffares have provided guidance to create this legislation. Their commitment to supporting the small businesses of Georgia shines through in SB 85,” said Nancy Palmer, Executive Director of the Georgia Craft Brewers Guild. According to Palmer the Georgia Beer Wholesalers Association is also due credit, “The business leaders of the GBWA have been crucial in this process.”

“I applaud the industries for coming together and agreeing to an innovative solution,” commented Lt. Governor Cagle. “The shared interest of supporting our emerging small business and creating more opportunities for Georgians is clearly reflected in this legislation.”

According to the most recent data from the [U.S.] Brewers Association, Georgia ranks 48th in breweries per capita, 41st in economic impact per capita, and 17th in overall craft beer production. In 2016 Georgia added 11 new breweries and brewpubs continuing a consistent trend of growth.

This just makes economic sense. Wherever state laws have been amended to allow brewery-to-customer beer sales in brewery taprooms, the number of breweries has grown, and often dramatically (and that would be in all of the forty-eight states and Washington, D.C., where it has happened). Translated, that means a rise in local employment and a rise in local and state tax revenue. Wholesalers, some of whom have seen the changes as threats to their business, instead have seen small breweries fill their taprooms with customers and gain the capital to grow, and then look to wholesalers to assist in out-the-door sales.

It appears that Georgia legislators and large beer wholesalers may have looked at those numbers and reached the same conclusions. But don't count your laws until they're passed and signed. Stay thirsty. Stay vigilant.

The Georgia Craft Brewers Guild was founded in 2010. With its published mission to "promote, protect, and further the craft brewing industry in Georgia," the Guild has helped lead on the taproom issue.

There are currently forty-five member breweries in the Guild, with at least ten more expected to open in 2017. The state brewery total is actually higher than that. Beer Guys Radio —a podcast on 'craft' beer in Georgia and Alabama— counts sixty-six breweries and brewpubs in Georgia, of which some are obviously not dues-paying members.

On Saturday, the Guild will celebrate #GeorgiaBeerDay at breweries, brewpubs, and good-beer bars and shops across the state. It's both a fundraiser to help promote the Guild's mission and an acknowledgment of the Georgia 'craft' brewery industry, a small-business industry, growing statewide.

Visit your favorite local breweries and brewpubs on January 28, 2017, as they fundraise on behalf of the Georgia Craft Brewer's Guild! Proceeds from events, tastings, beer dinners, and more will help push Georgia beer forward. We are excited for 2017 and hope you are too!

Maybe —maybe more than maybe— Saturday will indeed be a day to celebrate. Georgia is this blog's new home; YFGF will be celebrating, too.

***************

UPDATE Thursday, 2 February 2017:Associated Press reports that Georgia Bill #SB85 has passed the Georgia Senate by a vote of 49-2. Georgia brewers are now one step closer to being allowed to sell their own beer in their own breweries. The legislation now moves to the House, "where it has support from influential representatives."

UPDATE Monday, 13 March 2017:Ale Sharpton reports that The Georgia House voted 147-41 to adopt an amended version of Senate Bill 85. Because the House bill adds a provision for distillery taprooms, it needs to be agreed upon by the state Senate before it can head to Governor Nathan Deal for his signature. If that occurs, and the governor signs the legislation, the law would go into effect on 1 September.

UPDATE 15 March 2017:
Mississippi House Bill 1322 has passed, allowing small craft breweries in Mississippi to sell alcoholic beverages on their premises as of July 2017. Precisely:

Manufacture beer and light wine (up to 60,000 barrels);

Sell at retail no more than 10 percent or 1,500 barrels of the beer or light wine production for the year;

Sell no more than 576 ounces of beer or light wine to one individual within a period of 24 hours;

Sell to wholesalers.

A brewery will need an additional surety bond in order to be legally compliant for these sales.

UPDATE Wednesday 22 March 2017: Per GPB News, the Georgia Senate approved SB85 on 22 March, by a vote of 52-1 (amending it to include the distillery option added by the House). From here, the bill heads to Governor Nathan Deal. If he, as expected, signs it, the law will take effect on 1 September.

UPDATE 12 April 2017
At the Craft Brewers Conference in Washington, D.C., Matt McLaughlin, president of the Mississippi Brewers Guild was given the 2017 F.X. Matt Defense of the Craft Brewing Industry Award by the [U.S.] Brewers Association in recognition of his successful efforts to change Mississippi's small-brewery laws.

UPDATE 8 May 2017
Georgia Governor Nathan Deal signed SB85 into law today. Its provisions will take effect beginning on 1 September 2017.

UPDATE 1 September 2017As of today, breweries in the state of Georgia are allowed to sell THEIR beers in THEIR taprooms to THEIR customers. Georgia becomes the 51st (that is, the last) of all 50 states and Washington, D.C. to permit this.

Saturday, January 21, 2017

“Ordinary bitter is perhaps the single greatest achievement of British brewing, combining a huge amount of character, flavour and variety into something that, by international standards, is untypically low in strength.”
—The Pub Curmudgeon.

By definition, [ordinary bitter is] intended as an everyday quaffing beer for having a couple of pints at lunchtime without writing off the rest of the day, or an evening session in the pub that still leaves you reasonably clear-headed the following morning. It’s not meant to be an exotic show pony for sniffing, sipping and holding up to the light.

While its market share has been eroded in recent years by the rise of widely-distributed premium best bitters such as London Pride, Bombardier and Wainwright, ordinary bitter

—defined broadly as any beers between 3.4% and 4.0% ABV in the gold-amber-copper colour spectrum [emphasis mine]—

probably still accounts for half of all cask beer drunk in the UK, and undoubtedly more if you extend the definition to include keg ales too. But it still tends to be regarded as something of a poor relation against more fashionable, stronger and more heavily-promoted beers.

Which ordinary bitters stand out amongst those currently available? The one that immediately springs to mind is Harvey’s of Lewes, which many see as a perfect balance of malt and hops.

Whether Sussex is an ordinary (but not so ordinary) bitter or a best bitter, I'll not debate dinging nits. I'll simply stipulate to its goodness.

In 2005 and 2006, it won the Best Bitter category at the Great British Beer Festival. Last year, I was happy to taste it, not there, but over here, at the 12th annual Atlanta Cask Ale Tasting. It had survived its trans-Atlantic voyage well. I hope it will again be so fortunate, later today, at the 13th annual.

The Pub Curmudgeon concludes his encomium as a devils' advocate: “So can any beers in this category truly be regarded as great, or are they all well, just a bit "ordinary"?”

Monday, January 16, 2017

Pete Brown is a British beer writer. He was, until 2015, the author of The Cask Report, a yearly analysis of the state of the business of cask ale in the U.K., sponsored by the British brewing community. Which is why it was so surprising to read his essay today in the Morning Advertiser, entitled, “Why it’s time to say no to cask ale”*:

I have a terrible confession to make — terrible for someone with my CV anyway. I've mostly stopped drinking cask ale. [...] I've had enough of :

Bar staff saying 'it seems all right to me,' or 'well, no one else has complained,' when I take a pint back to the bar and patiently explain that it's laced with diacetyl.

Being told that the beer is supposed to be flat and dead because that's what real ale is like.

Taking back hazy pints and being told it's supposed to be like that because it's craft beer.

Pints that are not off, or infected, or hazy, but just dull and sub-par, whether because the beer is tired or because it's not finished its cellar conditioning and shouldn't be on sale.

We're always saying cask ale is special, unique, a cut above other beer, that it requires more care and attention. If you're not prepared to treat it like that, you're not supporting cask ale - you're wrecking it. [...] Do yourself, your customers, and cask ale brewers a favour and stop selling it.

For Pete Brown, of all people, a partisan of cask ale, to confess, “I’ve mostly stopped drinking cask ale,” is a disconsolate and surprising thing indeed. Commentators have noted that the article's title is click-bait: Mr. Brown is referring to 'bad' cask ale not to cask ale per se. But, in fact, Mr. Brown states that he has "mostly stopped drinking cask ale" because he finds too much in poor condition. It's this confession, his finding, not the editor's title, that is inflammatory.

How NOT to tap a cask (of cask-conditioned ale)

And, I’m afraid that I’m 90% there with Mr. Brown when it comes to cask ale in the U.S.

Here's my bill of particulars.
When, instead of producing cask-conditioned ale as the freshest and most vibrant it can be,

American breweries, too often, toss 'shit' into their casks, not because they should, but because they can;

American breweries, too often, rack unfinished beer into a cask and call it cask-conditioned;

Saturday, January 14, 2017

In April 1958, British newspaper The Times published a month-long special supplement.

It offers a comprehensive survey of the very varied aspects of beer, from barley to consumer. ¶ Beer is known as Britain's national beverage, and this volume contains something of interest to most people.

In 1960, The Times compiled the articles, publishing them in a standalone book, Beer In Britain. The map is from that book, long out-of-print. Like the book, many (most) of the breweries depicted are now long gone.

Monday, January 09, 2017

A bi-weekly, non-comprehensive roundup
of news of beer and other things.

Weeks 51/5218 - 31 December 2016

31 December 2016
To keep 'atomic' clocks synchronized with Earth's orbit, one 'leap' second was added to the last day of 2016, at 23:59:60 Coordinated Universal Time (CUT).
—Via AFP.

31 December 2016
Scientists have measure gravitational waves for the first time. That, and other findings of science in 2016.
—Via Daily Kos.

27 December 2016
Seventy-five years after Imperial Japanese warplanes destroyed the Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and drew the United States into World War II, a Japanese leader —Prime Minister Shinzo Abe— visited the site of the attack and offered condolences.
—Via New York Times.

26 December 2016
Anheuser-Busch InBev, MillerCoors, Ulysses Management, Fireman Capital: the business of U.S. big beer and big 'craft' in 2016.

[Anheuser-Busch InBev], the other existing U.S. brewer that did multiple deals in 2016 was Lagunitas Brewing Co. It formed “partnerships” with Petaluma, California, neighbor Moonlight Brewing, Texas-based Independence Brewing Co. and Southend Brewery & Smokehouse in South Carolina. Compared with deals announced in prior years, most of these were for relatively small companies. The largest brewery to sell all or part of itself was Brooklyn Brewery, in which Japanese giant Kirin bought a 24.5 percent stake. Many foreign brewers, like Kirin, remain interested in expanding their businesses and investing in the U.S. craft segment. There could be many similar deals where this one came from.

Financial entities also expanded their ownership of U.S. brewers in 2016. Early in the year, Ulysses Management added to its prior purchase of Southern Tier Brewing Co. by acquiring a majority of Victory Brewing Co., forming a company it’s calling Artisanal Brewing Ventures. And the group backed by Fireman Capital Partners and led by Oskar Blues Brewery added Cigar City Brewing Co. to its arsenal of commonly owned craft brands. A number of other smaller breweries also completed transactions this year, with buyers varying from local media and restaurant companies to even-smaller breweries. An average of two deals per month hit industry headlines during the first 10 months of 2016. No single deal shifted much more than 0.05 percent market share between U.S. brewers. But taken together, this one massive deal and many smaller ones contributed to ongoing fundamental shifts in the U.S. beer industry.

25 December 2016
Vera Rubin, who transformed modern physics and astronomy with her observations showing that galaxies and stars are immersed in the gravitational grip of vast clouds of dark matter, has died at 88. Dark matter, which hasn't been directly observed, is now known to make up 27 percent of universe — as opposed to 5 percent of the universe being normal matter. Dr. Rubin's scientific achievements earned her numerous awards and honors, including a National Medal of Science. Having suffered gender discrimination in her field, she was a lifelong champion advocate of women in science.
—Via New York Times.

25 December 2016
George Michael, the English songwriter who was one of pop's reigning stars, dies at age 53.
—Via New York Times.

24 December 2016
A casual observation by Albert Einstein would lead, years later, to the innovation of the wort clarification whirlpool at Molson Brewery, in 1960.
—Via Ed's Beer Site.

24 December 2016
Gold, frankincense, and myrrh? The Earth's last wild frankincense forests, in Somalia, are threatened with extinction.
—Via Associated Press.

24 December 2016

Lost among details of [Japanese brewery and soft drink corporation] Asahi buying Pilsner Urquell [from SABMiller] is the fact that the parent company now effectively has cornered the market on Saaz hops.

23 December 2016
The U.S. abstains from a United Nations Security Council resolution criticizing Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories. The abstention from the U.S. was a rare occasion where the U.S. did not protect Israel from criticism on the international stage. The U.S. has previously vetoed thirty resolutions regarding Israel and Palestinians.
—Via The Atlantic.

23 December 2016
Ending a run of more than thirty years on the air, Peabody-award-winning talk show host Diane Rehm ends her news and public affairs program broadcast over National Public Radio.
—Via NPR.

21 December 2016
Mumme: the original winter warmer? A German beer "to be eaten with a knife and fork,” dating back to the late 1400s.
—Via George Rivers, at Beer Strength Matters.

20 December 2016
Ken Grossman —owner of Sierra Nevada Brewing— and his wife, Katie Gonser, give UC Davis Brewing Program at the University of California Davis a two-million endowment, providing for an endowed Brewer position dedicated to mentoring and managing students and teaching assistants, maintaining the campus brewery and its equipment, and assisting in teaching brewing classes.
—Via UC Davis.

20 December 2016
A Los Angeles, California, bar is selling Colt 45 40-ounce bottles, in brown paper bags, for $15 a bottle. And people are buying.
—Via Food and Wine.

20 December 2016
Obama permanently bans offshore oil and gas drilling for large swaths of Alaska's Arctic and East Coast's Atlantic seaboards.
—Via New York Times.

Saturday, January 07, 2017

White House photographer Pete Souza poignantly posed this image of the 44th President of the United States, President Barack Obama, and First Lady Michelle Obama, gazing at the Chicago, Illinois, skyline, as the conclusion of Obama's second presidential term was drawing near.

Wistfully, I and many Americans thank the Obamas for their eight years of White House service to our nation, and wish them a hale and hearty future.

And, you know, '44' —President Obama— is the nation's first President, since George Washington, to brew beer. He is the only President ever to do so at the White House —our first Brewer-In-Chief.

Wednesday, January 04, 2017

Every Saturday, I post a photo to this blog. (Yes, today is Wednesday, but bear with me.)

Cleverly (to my mind), I call this practice the Pic(k) of the Week. Each week, it's a photo (or, should I say, digital image) usually taken (or created) by me, and usually (but not always) with a good (or bad) fermentable as subject. That is some significant hedging. I am not a photographer; (to paraphrase the old pharmaceutical ad campaign) I only play one at YFGF.

Thirty-two of the fifty-two photos I selected were of beer in some fashion: ten were at breweries, of which five were brewpubs. Three of the photos were brewers working. Another one was a smart-dressed Pabst man at a minor-league baseball game. Only four were of beer-and-food. One of those was of beer IN food; another was a beer lunch in a hop field in the U.K.: an example of a photo not taken by me, but of such a stellar scene that I secured permission to re-post it.

Five photos were nostalgic: from my former bailiwick. Three photos were baseball related. One photo was taken at a jazz performance, and tangentially baseball-related. A few went to the dogs. One was vehemently vegetarian.

I selected no pictures of cask ale for inclusion last year. That's a sad first for me, a cask ale nut. Over the year, I simply didn't encounter any good cask ale in Atlanta, Georgia (other than a few imported UK-produced pints at a local cask ale festival). That's a topic for another day.

So, take a look, below. Click on a thumbnail to view the image in its full size accompanied by its backstory. (By the way, all of my photographs and images, whether anointed for inclusion here or not, can be seen at Flickr, all thirty-five thousand of them.)

This Saturday, 7 January, I'll post a new Pic(k) of the Week, and the series will begin anew for 2017.